Concluding Concept 1: Kitkat: Have A Break - .
Concluding Concept 1: Kitkat: Have A Break - .
Concluding Concept 1: Kitkat: Have A Break - .
Concluding concept 1
KitKat: Have a break . . .
40
Chapter 1 Marketing now
categories. Part of the company’s brand policy is also to Exhibit 1.2 CBCL competitor performance
dedicate significant sums of money to advertising and
promotions. This helps to build customer loyalty and block Manufacturer % share % change year
the entrance of new competitors. On average, 10 per cent on year
of the sales value of the brand goes on advertising and
promotions. Rowntree 25.3 −2.6
United Biscuits 17.4 −15.7
Jacobs Bakery 12.0 −1.5
KitKat
Mars Confectionery 3.3 −14.0
When launched, KitKat entered a market already Burtons 7.1 −14.3
dominated by Cadbury’s Dairy Milk. In fact KitKat’s white Thomas Tunnocks 3.8 −3.5
and red end-to-end wrapping was designed to differ Fox’s 7.8 51.8
from Dairy Milk’s side-to-side purple wrapping. From its Others 5.7 3.6
beginning, KitKat was positioned as both a confectionery Cadbury 2.2 n/a
and a snack. It is now positioned halfway between a snack Private label 15.3 25.6
and an indulgence. In the consumers’ eyes, however, Total market 0.9
KitKat is essentially a snack product, and its slogan
‘Have a break, have a KitKat’ is widely known through SOURCE: AGB Superpanel.
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Exhibit 1.4 CBCL brand performance Exhibit 1.5 Countline brand performance
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priced 2p below KitKat two-finger. According to KitKat’s other minis. The company does not see them as a threat to
brand managers, ‘The objective for KitKat is to maintain its existing brands as the volume of minis is relatively low
customer loyalty by being innovative, and to remain the in comparison.
number one UK confectionery brand.’ There is evidence of The company is now producing to capacity. The
relative brand loyalty for KitKat. However, people who buy problem is managing demand in the marketplace. ‘We
KitKat two-finger will also be likely to buy other brands, can’t give them any more, so we use price to limit demand
such as Classic, Club Orange, Penguin, Twix, Blue Riband and to get maximum profit return on the amount we
and Gold. According to Brian Ford, the brand manager produce’, explains Ford. In his opinion, this is easier for
for the KitKat two-finger: ‘Although they have tried to the two-finger format because it is the market leader in
differentiate the two formats of KitKat in its segmentation the CBCL category, but is less easy in the four-finger case.
and positioning strategies, the consumer sees no ‘It is not the market leader in the chocolate count-line
difference in the total brand.’ sector, therefore we cannot dictate price.’
In light of the recent developments, KitKat has worked
hard to maintain its position as the market leader. When Brand pressures
KitKat Orange was launched as a limited edition, the first
For generations Rowntree had succeeded in the
flavour variant in its 59-year history, the success of the
marketplace by making highly differentiated products
product was so phenomenal that customers were writing
that the competition found hard to copy. This contrasted
letters to have the product re-released. A second new
with Mars whose products were strong brands but easy
mint variant has been even more popular in trials.
to make. Recently the company’s confidence had been
battered by the failure of Secret, a countline that used a
Competition new process to spin chocolate threads round a caramel
Competition is likely to come from small brands, grocery core. After two new production lines were built and the
retailers’ own labels and other lines coming into the UK. product heavily advertised using a highly atmospheric
There is also a crossover between the chocolate countline campaign based on a Secret Agent theme, the product
and the CBCL sector. Cadbury has recently encroached failed in the marketplace and proved too expensive to
into KitKat’s ‘Have a break’ territory with Time Out – a bar make. As a failure, the Secret story came very close to
aimed at the CBCL sector. Time Out aims to bridge the gap the flop of an equally differentiated Savanna, a pyramid-
between chocolate snack bars, such as Twirl, and wafer- shaped boxed chocolate, that had occurred a few years
based snacks, such as KitKat. It will compete with KitKat earlier. The company had also failed in their launch of the
and Twix and should take sales away from brands with Italian market-leading boxed chocolate Baci on to the UK
a ‘heavy sweet’ product image, like Spira and Twix. market. Targeted head-on against the successful Ferrero
Competition from other European confectioners has Rocher chocolates and given a powerful Italian theme
intensified with the growth of discounters such as Aldi (Verdi . . . Ferrari . . . Baci), customers had stuck to the
and Netto. This might lead to a price-cutting war in the established brand.
multiple grocery sector, especially among KwikSave, Following the failures, the new product emphasis had
Lo-Cost and Asda. Aldi is a particular concern because it shifted to levering existing brands rather than developing
is importing bags of KitKat minis from Germany. Although new ones. One idea was to follow Mars’ lead and launch
Rowntree sells many of its countlines as minis, it does a KitKat iced confectionery. Another was to launch KitKat
not make or sell KitKat in that format. Besides losing it Chunky, a thick, single finger of KitKat about the size of a
revenue, Aldi’s KitKat minis cause other problems: first, Snickers bar. This would be a ‘hunger satisfier’ like Mars’
large grocers, like Sainsbury and Tesco, now want market-leading countlines.
supplies of minis like Aldi’s; second, the biscuit and To fit the regulations across Europe, some KitKats
chocolate used to make the German KitKat are distinctly produced have different chocolate from others. Although
different from those used in Britain. they taste different, most consumers cannot tell the
Outside the UK, the four-finger format sells more than difference. The management of so many internationally
the two-finger format. European retailers outside the important brands limits the company’s freedom of action
UK also emphasise minis (Aldi imports only that form). outside the UK. The pricing relationships between, say,
Rowntree does sell minis in the UK, but these are very France, Germany and the UK need careful controlling.
low-volume products and appear only in variety packs with At the same time, the company needs to achieve its UK
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business objectives. The marketing of brands will be n boosting trade cooperation and becoming more
different because these brands are at different product category focused.
life-cycle states in different markets. ‘The UK is probably
KitKat was one of five brands identified for innovation.
the most sophisticated confectionery market in Europe’,
After years of relatively minor development of KitKat,
claims Robertson. ‘Therefore, for example, the company’s
a senior product manager and the ad agency had ‘dug
advertising style for KitKat is not directly transferable to
out ideas from the drawers’. Among them was KitKat
Germany. The German consumer does not understand the
Chocolate, a bar made of pure chocolate but in the shape
British sense of humour’, explains Robertson. ‘So, from
of a KitKat. The variant would be a direct attack on the
the business perspective, there is a pulling together in
Cadbury’s Dairy Milk that was the market leader when
Europe, while from the consumer perspective, there are
KitKat was launched. As Sonia ritualistically consumed her
still marked differences between different types of
KitKat she pondered that her new job was a great break,
consumers, and that is the biggest problem.’
but not an easy one.
The packing used for KitKat in the UK is different
from that used elsewhere. So KitKat exported to Germany
does not have UK packaging and vice versa. Germany’s
Questions
KitKat is flow-wrapped, whereas the UK has a foil and 1. Has KitKat taken a marketing-oriented approach to
band. This relatively expensive format appeared because developing its confectionery brand? What elements
of the early competition with Cadbury, whose market- of marketing orientation, if any, are missing?
leading milk chocolate bars had blue foil and a blue 2. What is the situation facing KitKat: the strengths and
wrapper. To differentiate it from Cadbury, the KitKat weaknesses of the brand and the opportunities and
pack is a silver foil with a visually strong red band threats it faces?
wrapped end to end. 3. How and why are the KitKat two-fingers and four-fingers
Standardisation to less expensive flow wrap had been marketed differently?
resisted in the UK because of the ritualistic way that UK 4. What are the barriers to the brand’s standardisation across
consumers eat KitKat. Often they eat KitKat socially over Europe and should the company now move towards
a cup of tea. When eating KitKat, many consumers first standardising its brand and packaging across Europe?
take off the red wrapper, then run a finger down the foil 5. How would you describe the organisational structure of the
between two biscuits. With the top of the foil broken, the company and its marketing department? In what alternative
KitKat fingers are snapped off and then eaten one by one, ways could the company organise the management of its wide
just as KitKat’s new assistant brand manager, Sonia Ng, range of confectionery?
did. Her job was to develop a brand plan for KitKat while 6. Should the launch of KitKat Chocolate be once again rejected?
the whole tradition of KitKat was being challenged. After a
series of product failures top management had decided to SOURCES: Adapted and prepared with assistance from: the advertising
revitalise the business by: agency J. Walter Thompson, London; Nestlé Rowntree, York; and
Nestec, Vevey, Switzerland and reference to Nicholas Whitaker, Sweet
n focusing more on major brands, reducing the overall
Talk: A secret history of confectionery (Victor Gollancz, London, 1988);
brand portfolio; Kamran Kashani (ed.), A Virtuous Cycle: Innovation, consumer value,
n using existing brands for innovation where possible; and communication (European Brands Association, London, 2000);
n making sure that much more emphasis went into Nicholas Kochan (ed.), The World’s Greatest Brands (Interbrand/
meeting customers’ expectations, through improving Macmillan Business, London, 2003) and kitkat.co.uk; names, statistics
performance versus price; and some details have been changed for commercial reasons.
44